Acoustics
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Acoustics and Vibration Animations
Acoustics and Vibration Animations Dan Russell, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Applied Physics at Kettering University in Flint, MI The links below contain animations which visualize certain concepts concerning acoustics and vibration. The choice of animations coincides with topics covered in the courses PHYS-382, Acoustics I: Sounds and Sources, and PHYS-482, Acoustics II: Sound and Vibration, ...
www.kettering.edu/~drussell/demos.html reviews
Acoustics FAQ
Acoustics FAQ From: Andrew Silverman Enviro@measure.demon.co.uk Newsgroups: alt.sci.physics.acoustics, alt.answers, news.answers Subject: Acoustics FAQ Followup-To: alt.sci.physics.acoustics Date: Sun, 07 Sep 97 20:55:00 GMT Organization: EnviroMeasure Message-ID: 873665061snz@measure.demon.co.uk Reply-To: Enviro@measure.demon.co.uk X-Mail2News-User: Enviro@measure.demon.co.uk X-Newsreader: ...
www.faqs.org/faqs/physics-faq/acoustics/ reviews
The UK Quiet Pages
The UK Quiet Pages seeks to provide information about noise and acoustics issues and pressure groups with links to acoustics books ...
www.quiet.org.uk/ reviews
Trigonometry and Music
Trigonometry and Music Sounds are produced by things that vibrate. Pure tones, like the the sounds produced by tuning forks, are described by sine waves y = A sin(2 pi f t), where t is time, f is how many times the thing is vibrating per second (f is for frequency, and A is how loud the sound is (A is for amplitude). If something is vibrating 256 times a second, you hear middle c. Sound of ...
www.csm.astate.edu/music.html reviews
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